DCK (Buckethead album)

This article is about Buckethead's music album. For other uses, see DCK (disambiguation).
Death Cube K
Studio album by Death Cube K
Released Jul 18 2007 (limited edition)
Sep 6 2007 (standard edition)
Genre Dark Ambient
Ambient
Experimental
Length 51:28
Label TDRS Music
Death Cube K chronology
Tunnel
(1999)
DCK
(2007)
Monolith
(2007)

DCK is Buckethead's fourth album under the anagram Death Cube K.

The limited edition started on Jul 18 2007 [1] and ended on Aug 24 2007.[2] The non-limited version was available a few days later on Sep 6 2007.[3]

Initial copies were lettered and numbered by Buckethead, but only 400 of these were made. Later CDs came without the number but with silver DCK letters. The album doesn't have an official track listing, just coming in a plain black case with no further information.[4]

This album is commonly mislabeled as the long-awaited Torn From Black Space, released in 2009. An unofficial statement on the Silent Watcher Bill Laswell (frequent collaborator of Buckethead and the first Death Cube K releases) discography site, talked about the creation of the new label RareNoise and the releases on this label (which includes Torn From Black Space):

Eraldo Bernocchi's new label should start in full swing in 2009. Amongst the projects being released will be a live Method of Defiance album, Death Cube K's Torn From Black Space (which contrary to popular belief is NOT the CD-R that TDRS released), a new Charged album and another live Somma gig.[5]

Track listing

No. Title Length
1. "Untitled 1"   5:55
2. "Untitled 2"   5:58
3. "Untitled 3"   4:06
4. "Untitled 4"   6:33
5. "Untitled 5"   6:10
6. "Untitled 6"   5:28
7. "Untitled 7"   3:44
8. "Untitled 8"   7:47
9. "Untitled 9"   5:47
Total length:
51:27

References

  1. "Travis Dickerson Recording Studio Forum - Index". Tdrsmusic.com. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  2. "Travis Dickerson Recording Studio Forum - Index". Tdrsmusic.com. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  3. "Travis Dickerson Recording Studio Forum - Index". Tdrsmusic.com. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  4. Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine.
  5. Archived March 31, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.


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